Back to Search Start Over

A review of instruments to measure interprofessional team-based primary care

Authors :
Judith Schaefer
Sarah J. Shoemaker
Meaghan Hunt
Jessica S. Levin
Michael L. Parchman
Richard Ricciardi
Kathleen Kerwin Fuda
Source :
Journal of Interprofessional Care. 30:423-432
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2016.

Abstract

Interprofessional team-based care is increasingly regarded as an important feature of delivery systems redesigned to provide more efficient and higher quality care, including primary care. Measurement of the functioning of such teams might enable improvement of team effectiveness and could facilitate research on team-based primary care. Our aims were to develop a conceptual framework of high-functioning primary care teams to identify and review instruments that measure the constructs identified in the framework, and to create a searchable, web-based atlas of such instruments (available at: http://primarycaremeasures.ahrq.gov/team-based-care/ ). Our conceptual framework was developed from existing frameworks, the teamwork literature, and expert input. The framework is based on an Input-Mediator-Output model and includes 12 constructs to which we mapped both instruments as a whole, and individual instrument items. Instruments were also reviewed for relevance to measuring team-based care, and characterized. Instruments were identified from peer-reviewed and grey literature, measure databases, and expert input. From nearly 200 instruments initially identified, we found 48 to be relevant to measuring team-based primary care. The majority of instruments were surveys (n = 44), and the remainder (n = 4) were observational checklists. Most instruments had been developed/tested in healthcare settings (n = 30) and addressed multiple constructs, most commonly communication (n = 42), heedful interrelating (n = 42), respectful interactions (n = 40), and shared explicit goals (n = 37). The majority of instruments had some reliability testing (n = 39) and over half included validity testing (n = 29). Currently available instruments offer promise to researchers and practitioners to assess teams' performance, but additional work is needed to adapt these instruments for primary care settings.

Details

ISSN :
14699567 and 13561820
Volume :
30
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Interprofessional Care
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5f17a93bac1a17ea5f51007005e70c89
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3109/13561820.2016.1154023